Login / Signup

Age-Related Differences Between Young and Old Adults: Effects of Advance Information on Task Switching.

Wen-Pin ChangI-Hsuan ShenChien-Pei WenChia-Ling Chen
Published in: Perceptual and motor skills (2020)
In this study we investigated the effects of advance information on task switching in young and old adults, using two forms of advance information (memory-based and cue-based) and a no advance information task. We compared 19 healthy young and 19 healthy older adults in terms of their behavioral performance and neural correlates under these three task-switching paradigms. We observed a significant difference in mixing cost between the two age groups. There was no switch cost group difference on the memory-based and cue-based tasks, but older adults showed a larger switch cost than younger adults on the no advance information task. On evoked potential measures, there was no group effect in P3 cue-locked positivity; but there was, a frontal shift of the target-locked P3, indexed as reactive control, among older adults. We observed an increased target-locked P3 in the no-information paradigm compared with the cue-based and memory-based paradigms in both groups. Task cue facilitated advance preparation and proactive control under the cue-based paradigm in both groups. Age-related decline and difficulty in control processes required for task goal maintenance were apparent among the older adults.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • health information
  • physical activity
  • middle aged
  • healthcare
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • risk assessment
  • social media
  • climate change
  • magnetic resonance
  • human health
  • contrast enhanced